If there was anybody still wondering if a new Donald Trump would appear on the west front of the Capitol on Friday, the new president showed them quickly it was not to be.
Steve Sebelius
As ever, State of the Fill-In-The-Blank speeches are more notable for the omissions than for the text.
Talk about your political one-upsmanship.
Nevada’s next election is a long way off on the calendar, but nearing quickly for politicians planning to run for governor.
With a new Republican Congress sworn in — and a new president on the way — the thorny issue of government funding for Planned Parenthood is about to hit the top of the legislative agenda.
The view from the top of windswept Blue Diamond Hill is breathtaking — from there, you can see almost the entire Las Vegas Valley and the majestic Red Rock Canyon.
To call 2015’s Assembly Bill 394 controversial would be a gross understatement.
Not long after Donald Trump won the presidency, an online poster said he’d treat the new chief executive with the same deference and respect that greeted President Obama after his election.
In the end, it all came down to money.
Nevada’s newest U.S. senator knows in her head that passing comprehensive immigration reform is a long shot, especially in the dawning Donald Trump era. But that doesn’t mean she’s going to stop fighting.
It’s no secret Democrats and their traditional allies staunchly opposed Education Savings Accounts when they were proposed in 2015.
Thanks to a majority of Nevada voters, recreational marijuana will become legal in the state on Jan. 1.
Remember that time the federal government passed a law saying Nevada’s Yucca Mountain should be the only place to bury the nation’s high-level nuclear waste?
There will never be another Harry Reid.
It’s time for everybody — regardless of political affiliation — to get their minds around a simple idea: Donald J. Trump will be inaugurated as the 45th president of the United States at noon on Jan. 20, 2017 in the city of Washington.